• Menu
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Before Header

  • About Us
  • Lexicon
  • Contact Us
  • Our Store
  • ↑
  • ↓

Balloon Juice

Come for the politics, stay for the snark.

You can’t attract Republican voters. You can only out organize them.

The arc of history bends toward the same old fuckery.

Hell hath no fury like a farmer bankrupted.

Nancy smash is sick of your bullshit.

Balloon Juice, where there is always someone who will say you’re doing it wrong.

Human rights are not a matter of opinion!

A tremendous foreign policy asset… to all of our adversaries.

Decision time: keep arguing about the last election, or try to win the next one?

Not rolling over. fuck you, make me.

Dear Washington Post, you are the darkness now.

They fucked up the fucking up of the fuckup!

Boeing: repeatedly making the case for high speed rail.

Welcome to day five of every-bit-as-bad-as-you-thought-it-would-be.

Not all heroes wear capes.

There are some who say that there are too many strawmen arguments on this blog.

The republican speaker is a slippery little devil.

They punch you in the face and then start crying because their fist hurts.

Let’s not be the monsters we hate.

You know it’s bad when the Project 2025 people have to create training videos on “How To Be Normal”.

It’s always darkest before the other shoe drops.

The real work of an opposition party is to oppose.

This country desperately needs a functioning fourth estate.

If you are still in the gop, you are either an extremist yourself, or in bed with those who are.

fuckem (in honor of the late great efgoldman)

Mobile Menu

  • 4 Directions VA 2025 Raffle
  • 2025 Activism
  • Donate with Venmo, Zelle & PayPal
  • Site Feedback
  • War in Ukraine
  • Submit Photos to On the Road
  • Politics
  • On The Road
  • Open Threads
  • Topics
  • Authors
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Lexicon
  • Our Store
  • Politics
  • Open Threads
  • 2025 Activism
  • Garden Chats
  • On The Road
  • Targeted Fundraising!
Open Thread:  Hey Lurkers!  (Holiday Post)

Open Threads

You are here: Home / Archives for Open Threads

Is It the 60s Again? Cory Booker and Hakeem Jeffries Sit-In at the Capital

by WaterGirl|  April 28, 202510:45 am| 63 Comments

This post is in: Democratic Response to Trump 2.0, Open Threads, Political Action, Politics

Mousebumples sent me an email about the sit-in yesterday,  but of course I didn’t see it until today!

Did any of you from Virginia or DC area go to this?  I would love to hear from you if you did!

Rolling Stone article, if you are interested.

More and more, I am trying to link to the AP and other news organizations rather than the more classic sources that have shown themselves to slant toward promotion of the maladministration’s agenda.

It doesn’t seem like this has gotten a lot of press, but over 250,000 people have watched the live feed from yesterday.

Open thread.

Is It the 60s Again? Cory Booker and Hakeem Jeffries Sit-In at the CapitalPost + Comments (63)

I’d Prefer the Smoky Back Rooms, Honestly

by Rose Judson|  April 28, 20258:52 am| 170 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads, Politics, Technology, Assholes, The Horrors

Turns out there are more toxic group chats out there than Pete Hesgeth’s. This morning (or last night, depending on your time zone), Semafor reports on the years-long elite group chats that “changed America”. We are all well aware already that our elites long ago left the smoky back rooms where they used to define our fates for the friendlier environs of Davos and the Aspen Ideas Festival and what have you. Since 2020, those discussions are increasingly happening on Signal and WhatsApp. The Semafor article focuses on those which center around the incredible inedible egg, Marc Andreessen. A genuine innovator of tech 30 years ago – he was the inventor of the modern web browser and a co-founder of Netscape – Andreessen now seems to be in the grip of poster’s madness:

Occasionally over the past few years, I’ve had a friend or source tell me in wonder that Andreessen was blowing up their phone. His hunger for information was “astonishing,” one participant in the group chat said. “My impression is Marc spends half his life on 100 of these at the same time,” another correspondent marveled. “This man should be a lot busier than I am and I can barely keep up with his group chat. How does he have the time?”

Andreessen has told friends he finds the medium efficient — a way to keep in touch with three times the people in a third of the time. The fact that he and other billionaires spend so much time writing to group chats prompted participants to joke that the very pinnacle of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs is posting.

Along with the tech-centric WhatsApp groups Krishnan had organized out of a16z, Andreessen joined a slew of others, including ones that Torenberg set up for tech founders and for more political discussions. The tech chats tended to be on WhatsApp and the political ones on Signal, which is more fully encrypted, and they had different settings.

It would be one thing if these dudes were just shitposting to each other, but they’re not. They are doing the ideological equivalent of huffing each other’s farts for “up to 20 hours a day (not kidding!)”, as Mark Halperin claims later in the article, to the point where multiple members, but particularly Andreessen, according to Richard Hanania, “radicalised over time”, becoming more and more authoritarian and reactionary.

Yes, that Richard Hanania. The guy who wrote The Origins of Woke, a book described as a “Trojan horse for white supremacy“. He’s alarmed by the radicalisation on display. Part of the article focuses on a large group called “Chatham House” – named for, but not associated with, the influential London-based international relations think tank. No, this group chat is a funhouse-mirror version of that, a nightmare blunt rotation that’s constantly blowing up your phone:

Two of [Chatham House’s] conservative participants said they see the group as a way to shift centrist Trump-curious figures to the Republican side, but its founder said he’d begun it to have “a left-right exchange where we could have real conversations because of filter bubble group chats.”

Chatham House includes high-profile figures like the economist Larry Summers and the historian Niall Ferguson, and more partisan figures like Shapiro and the Democratic analyst David Shor. Andreessen lurks. But several participants described it to me as something like a gladiatorial arena with Cuban most often in the center, sparring with conservatives….

The Group Chat Era depended on part of the American elite feeling shut out from public spaces, and on the formation of a new conservative consensus. Both of those are now fading (though Torenberg has invested in a company called ChatBCC that wants to commercialize the heady experience of sitting in on texts among the power elite).

Since Elon Musk turned X to the right and an alternative media ecosystem emerged on Substack, “a tremendous amount of the verboten conversations can now shift back into public view,” Andreessen told Fridman. “It’s much healthier to live in a society in which people are literally not scared of what they’re saying.”

Tell that to the college students who’ve been snatched by ICE for writing op-eds, you clod. Still, there does seem to be a plus side: the economic turmoil set in motion by Liberation Day is causing fissures in these latter-day salons of the great and good goofy:

I'd Prefer the Smoky Back Rooms, Honestly

Ben Smith (formerly of Buzzfeed and the NYT), whose article this is, notes that these chats (and their e-mail list predecessors, like JournoList) “encourage conformity, and then transform public fora — blogs then, social media now — into pitched battles between well-prepared debate clubs, rather than open conversations.”

Well, no kidding. Elites have always done and are always going to do shit like this – gather in secret, commiserate with one another about how hard it is to run the world, groom biddable journalists into surfacing their ideas, compare yachts – but at least in latter days they couldn’t instantaneously broadcast their ideas to their fellow insiders for 20 hours at a time. Send them back to smoke-filled rooms in the exclusive clubs, I say – at least then there’ll be a non-zero chance that they actually leave to do their jobs once in a while. And that their lungs might rot as fast as their brains are doing.

Anyway, good morning, I guess. Open thread.

I’d Prefer the Smoky Back Rooms, HonestlyPost + Comments (170)

Vulgar Schadenfreude Late Night Open Thread

by Anne Laurie|  April 27, 202511:45 pm| 138 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

What a mess

[image or embed]

— Adam Parkhomenko (@adamparkhomenko.bsky.social) April 26, 2025 at 1:02 PM

always so funny to see trump on the world stage because he is big nuts mcgee with his band of sycophants and cheering blonde nazi moms but he shrinks into a little boy when he has to meet with grownups
the most mentally fucked up president in history. he makes nixon look like eisenhower.

— not an art thief (@famousartthief.bsky.social) April 26, 2025 at 9:25 PM

get trump in a room with four guys that played baseball and one guy would walk in and say who is this fat old bitch and another guy would say hey nice tie, does it go all the way to floor and a third guy would say incredible hair, you buy that at joanne’s fabrics and he would kill himself.

— not an art thief (@famousartthief.bsky.social) April 26, 2025 at 9:36 PM

i give donald trump credit, he rolled into *europe* and said i’m going to be the pettiest bitch here. and then he met the french guy shorter than napoleon and got served ten whole bags of frenchness. on camera.

— not an art thief (@famousartthief.bsky.social) April 26, 2025 at 10:07 PM

This is my take on the whole Trump third term bullshit, we're less than 100 days in and he's like.. visibly falling apart. The presidency, even when you do the absolute minimum like Trump, is REALLY REALLY STRESSFUL

— Schnorkles O'Bork (@schnorkles.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 1:52 PM

There's going to be an interview with Biden in like a month or so and he's going to sound much better than he did.
Why? Because the presidency and the campaign trail are fucking brutal, they turn healthy 50 somethings into zombies, much less a man in his 80's.

[image or embed]

— Schnorkles O'Bork (@schnorkles.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 1:52 PM

Vulgar Schadenfreude Late Night Open ThreadPost + Comments (138)

War for Ukraine Day 1,158: The Conditionally Unconditional Ceasefire

by Adam L Silverman|  April 27, 202510:09 pm| 13 Comments

This post is in: Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, Military, Open Threads, Russia, Silverman on Security, War, War in Ukraine

Here’s Ukraine’s air defense tally from last night:

Reasonably heavy attack by Russia on Ukraine overnight with Shahed flying-bomb drones: of 149 launched, 57 shot-down, 67 jammed/crashed/lost. A further 25 presumably reached targets – air force reports damage in Zhytomyr, Dnipropetrovsk, Odesa, Donetsk, Sumy and Cherkasy oblasts.

[image or embed]

— Euan MacDonald (@euanmacdonald.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 2:20 AM

Air force report:

[image or embed]

— Euan MacDonald (@euanmacdonald.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 2:21 AM

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who is not in Putin’s inner circle and serves to basically use Russia’s diplomatic power as a weapon, made an appearance on one of the Sunday shows this morning. He had thoughts.

LAVROV: Why don’t you ask me about President Trump’s position on Crimea?

BRENNAN: You like what President Trump said about Crimea when he said that it has been under Russian control since 2014?

L: It’s not about liking or disliking. It’s about the fact that he said the truth…this is a done deal

[image or embed]

— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar.com) April 27, 2025 at 11:06 AM

I didn’t say they were good thoughts. Including those about the “unconditional” ceasefire:

Lavrov dodges straight questions on a Ukraine ceasefire, falling back on tired talking points: “You want a truce just to keep arming Ukraine? Kallas and Rutte say they’ll only back a deal that strengthens Ukraine,” сlaiming the goal isn’t peace but “Ukraine’s victory.”

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 12:48 PM

Russia is willing to agree to an “unconditional” ceasefire if weapons shipments to Ukraine stop and if the ceasefire isn’t used to strengthen Ukraine’s military- Lavrov said.

Conditional “unconditional” ceasefire. What a clown 🤡

[image or embed]

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 12:57 PM

The Kremlin will keep putting forth completely unacceptable demands in order to make it seem Ukraine is to blame for a lack of progress in the “peace process.”

[image or embed]

— Euan MacDonald (@euanmacdonald.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 1:37 PM

SoinCO asked the following question this morning:

If tRump is such a good deal maker, why hasn’t he responded to putin’s aggressions by resuming arms deliveries to Ukraine?

The simple answer is he doesn’t want to. As far as he is concerned sending anything to Ukraine without getting something in return makes him and the US, but especially him, a loser because he’s not getting more about the deal.

Here is President Zelenskyy’s address from earlier today. Video below, English transcript after the jump.

show full post on front page

We Are Keeping Our Positions Strong So That We Have Every Opportunity for Proper Diplomacy – Address by the President

27 April 2025 – 21:24

Dear Ukrainians!

Today, Commander-in-Chief Syrskyi already delivered several reports on the frontline situation. Our military continues to operate in the Kursk and Belgorod regions – we maintain our presence in Russia. Pokrovsk, all other directions in the Donetsk region – I want to thank our warriors for resilience. Incredible job! Particularly good results have been achieved by the 3rd Operational Brigade of the National Guard in the Pokrovsk direction. We are keeping our positions strong so that we have every opportunity for proper diplomacy.

The Russians talk a lot about their alleged readiness to accept American proposals, but so far, there have been no signs of the Russian army preparing for real silence. On the contrary, since Easter, the occupier has resumed its usual assault activity – of course, at the cost of significant losses, the Russians are trying to advance. And every day of such battles at the front proves that Russia is really trying to deceive the world – to deceive America and others – and to further prolong this war. And that is why we need pressure. Pressure is indispensable to make the Russians take all the steps – whatever is necessary to stop the war. Yesterday’s meetings in the Vatican and Rome confirmed that our partners understand what is happening. Ukraine is ready to move as swiftly as possible in diplomacy. 47 days ago, we agreed to the American proposal for an unconditional ceasefire, and later we made our own proposals to the Russians to stop striking civilian objects – at least that. But in Moscow, they are responding with Shaheds, missiles, artillery, and new assaults. A proper response from the world is needed – a response with new sanctions and even greater pressure. Of course, it is America that can take the most tangible steps – tangible for Russia.

Just overnight, the Russians launched nearly 150 attack drones against Ukraine. Since March 11 – when America proposed a full and unconditional ceasefire during negotiations in Saudi Arabia – the Russians have used nearly eight and a half thousand aerial bombs, almost two hundred missiles of various types, and nearly three thousand Shaheds. The overwhelming majority of them have been aimed at ordinary cities – at civilian targets. This must be stopped. Russia must halt its strikes – unconditionally. I thank everyone around the world who is helping us in this – who is helping to make diplomacy strong. And today, I want to especially recognize our Ukrainian rescuers personally – the entire team of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine, all utility services involved, and the National Police of Ukraine. I thank everyone who saves lives every single day. Thousands of people across our country are working to provide help as quickly as possible – to save as many lives as possible. I would like to specifically recognize the rescuers from Kyiv and the Kyiv region who worked this week following the Russian strike. Oleksandr Bobko, Oleksandr Kravchuk, Hennadii Petrivskyi, Yurii Shpak – employees of the 10th State Fire and Rescue Unit – I want to thank you all! Oleksandr Voronevych, Ruslan Kravchenko, Oleh Rybalko, and Oleksandr Ukhatenko – the 18th State Fire and Rescue Unit – thank you very much! Employees of the Mobile Rescue Center for Rapid Response of the State Emergency Service of Ukraine – Ivan Miroshnychenko, Ivan Koval, Oleksandr Shylo, Anatolii Shcherbyna, Mykhailo Kudrenko, Ihor Lytvynenko, Dmytro Khoroshok – thank you! Also, employees of the Special-Purpose Emergency Rescue Unit from the Kyiv region – Denys Tkachenko, Oleksandr Mykoda, and Ivan Robul – thank you! The men from the Cherkasy region – also employees of the Emergency Rescue Unit who assisted here in Kyiv – Vadym Buhai, Oleh Herezha, Andrii Panteleiev – thank you! I thank everyone who is working for our people! I thank all of you – everyone who is defending Ukraine!

Glory to Ukraine!

Georgia:

#GeorgiaProtests
Day 151

[image or embed]

— Publika.ge (@publikage.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 1:57 PM

“The people will prevail! Strength is in unity! Fire to the oligarchy!” 🔥

After a successful demo yesterday marking 150 consecutive days of protest, the mood on Rustaveli Avenue feels more hopeful today.

Day 151 — our main avenue remains blocked.

[image or embed]

— Rusudan Djakeli (@rusudandjakeli.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 2:00 PM

On January 14, Batumi City Court jailed Mzia Amaglobeli, CEO of Batumelebi and Netgazeti, for slapping a police chief. She faces 4–7 years in prison, while no one has been held accountable for violent police attacks on journalists and civilians.
#RepressionInGeorgia
#GeorgiaProtests

[image or embed]

— Batumelebi&Netgazeti (@netgazeti.org) April 27, 2025 at 12:47 PM

JUST IN: pro-Russian “Solidarity for Peace” party (that no one has even heard of in Georgia) officially demands from the Prosecution to launch criminal investigation against the legitimate President Zourabichvili and former Ombudsman Ucha Nanuashvili over “criminal attempts at regime change.” 1/

[image or embed]

— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 7:54 AM

They base accusation on Russian ORT broadcasting of a brief conversation between Russian pranksters with Zourabichvili and Nanuashvili. The pranksters presented themselves as the Ukrainian ex-President Poroshenko and Russian opposition figure Garry Kasparov, in addition to Rep. Joe Wilson’s reps. 2/

— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 7:54 AM

In the conversation, the President stated that since the closure of USAID and slow European action in terms of transferring promised funds to civil society instead of state institutions, the democratic camp has been starved. 3/

— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 7:54 AM

Surprise surprise, cracking down on any and all funds of CSOs (because it depends vitally on foreign aid since there’s basically no local independent money) starves CSOs and the democratic camp! Who would have thought?! Certainly not the illegitimate regime that adopted such laws! 4/4.

— Marika Mikiashvili 🇬🇪🇺🇦🇪🇺 (@marikamikiashvili.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 7:54 AM

The US:

“This week is going to be a very important week, in which we will have to make a determination about whether this is an endeavor we want to continue to be involved in, or if it is time to focus on some other issues that are equally, if not more, important”- Rubio about Ukraine.

[image or embed]

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 9:32 AM

You didn’t do anything yet. You had no time to do anything meaningful whatsoever🤦‍♀️

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 9:32 AM

Make an effort!

Is he ok

[image or embed]

— Mira of Kyiv 🇺🇦 (@reshetz.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 8:54 AM

No, no he is definitely not okay.

🇺🇸🇺🇦 The U.S.-Ukraine natural resources deal will be finalized, said advisor Mike Waltz. He noted that Secretary Bessent and President Trump have been working hard to close the agreement, and that Trump is fully committed to getting it done.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 11:01 AM

Again, there is no deal here. There is a list of demands from the US that the Ukrainians are not, because they cannot, going to agree to. If something does actually get done, it is not going to look anything like the proposal that Trump and his team have put forward.

Back to Ukraine.

I agree with Minna…she’s smart and she’s right. Ukraine should not take a bad deal that doesnt meet their interests. They are actually winning on the battlefield, according to SACEUR Cavoli’s testimony in front of HASC and SASC…and the Russians will never live up to any agreement unless compelled.

[image or embed]

— Ben Hodges (@general-ben.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 6:53 AM

The author of the essay in The Times is Professor Mark Galeotti: (emphasis mine)

Has Donald Trump finally had an epiphany about Vladimir Putin’s appetite for peace, appropriately at the Vatican? His social media post, after meeting Volodymyr Zelensky, that the Russian leader “maybe doesn’t want to stop the war” but instead is “just tapping me along, and has to be dealt with differently”, offers Ukraine some hope that he might modify the proposed deal he had previously said was “set in stone”. In the past, though, such moments of clarity have been brief and quickly forgotten, so for now Kyiv must still grapple with the implications of that ultimatum.

The deal is a terrible one, at odds with both international law and basic decency. But it may yet prove impossible for Ukraine or its other western allies to improve the terms as long as Trump remains in the White House. For all their courage, Ukrainians cannot afford to fight for another three years and nine months without America’s backing. As even Vitali Klitschko, the former world heavyweight boxing champion who is now mayor of Kyiv, admitted last week, the “painful solution” of trading land for an end to the fighting is “not fair” but may now be necessary.

The peace plan has not publicly been detailed, but its terms are clear. It envisages an immediate ceasefire and the start of direct talks between Moscow and Kyiv. Ukraine would be barred from joining Nato and would sign the planned minerals and infrastructure deal with Washington. Meanwhile, America would formally accept Russian sovereignty over annexed Crimea, and informally recognise its control over the other occupied territories. The US would also lift its sanctions on Moscow, although there may be an immediate “snap back” in case of renewed Russian aggression.

It will be immensely hard for Ukraine to accept terms so generous to the invader. Perhaps half a million dead and wounded across the military and civilian population; some 20,000 forcibly abducted children; ten million refugees, of whom seven million have fled the country; £135 billion in damage to the nation’s infrastructure. These figures represent a terrible toll that cannot be overlooked.

There are of course grounds to worry that, if accepted, this deal will only embolden Putin, just as the West’s acquiescence to Russian gains following his 2008 invasion of Georgia and his 2014 seizure of Crimea encouraged him to take the biggest gamble of his rule and mount a full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022. It is also possible that Beijing would see the Kremlin essentially being rewarded for seizing part of another sovereign nation and regard it as licence to take Taiwan.

These are arguments against the current peace terms that it is for America and its European partners to consider. But Ukraine, locked in an existential struggle for survival, does not have the luxury of worrying about other’s countries’ fates.

Would such a deal mean the end of Zelensky’s political career? Even if many Ukrainians want peace — polls suggest that half may be willing to consider a peace-for-land swap — they may make him the scapegoat for their understandable anger. If the deal is accepted, it might well become the last service that this extraordinary wartime president undertakes for his nation.

The immediate response from many Ukrainians and their supporters abroad is that the country can and must fight on. This is certainly an option: the Ukrainians have demonstrated extraordinary fortitude in this war.

However, the Trump administration has so far seemed determined to wash its hands of the whole situation if Kyiv rejects this latest version of the deal. A reported counter-proposal in which the US would provide firm security guarantees for Ukraine seems a non-starter.

More at the link.

First, as I’ve stated here repeatedly, whatever the Ukrainians decide they have to do, is what they should do. Second, I’m not really sure Professor Galeotti is really grappling with his own statements of fact. There is no doubt that Putin will not abide by the accord as he has never abided by any of the other one’s he as the leader of Russia and Russia itself have agreed to. If the recording is correct, what Trump and his team envision as a deal is that Russia gets rewarded for genocidally re-invading Ukraine, committing hundreds if not thousands of war crimes, while Ukraine just has to live with it. It isn’t that such a “deal” isn’t fair, it is also not necessary.

The Ukrainians seem to be far more aware of the actual reality than Professor Galeotti is:

Ukraine is nowhere near real negotiations to end the war — we are at the same point as last fall, says former Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba.

[image or embed]

— NOELREPORTS (@noelreports.com) April 27, 2025 at 2:21 AM

Even Tory Party leader Badenoch, who seems to be a gibbering bigoted ignoramus on a good day, seems to get it:

UK Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch: “Ukraine fights for all of Europe. Russia isn’t an ally—Ukraine is. We must preserve its territorial integrity, support it with US help.” She added that a peace deal with territorial loss is just a “reward for Putin’s aggression.”

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 7:40 AM

Kupyansk, Kharkiv Oblast:

In Kupyansk, Kharkiv region, the Russian army targeted a civilian car with a drone, injuring a local doctor.

[image or embed]

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 7:21 AM

Russians launched around 10 glide bombs on the Kupiansk districts of the Kharkiv region overnight, killing one person and injuring four others.

[image or embed]

— Kate from Kharkiv (@kateinkharkiv.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 7:26 AM

Sumy Oblast:

Ouch!

A Russian assault group on quad bikes simultaneously drives over mines while attempting to attack Ukrainian positions.

[image or embed]

— 🦋Special Kherson Cat🐈🇺🇦 (@specialkhersoncat.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 2:22 PM

I’m sure that’ll buff right out.

The Kursk cross border offensive:

Ukrainian scouts from the 92nd Assault Brigade, using a Shark UAV, detected an enemy logistics base and coordinated a devastating artillery strike on it, likely on the Kursk front.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 3:18 AM

Per DeepState, fighting in Kursk continues this morning, despite Russian leadership’s claims of “liberating” the region. The enemy remains active near Gornal and Oleshnya, the last villages under Ukrainian control.

[image or embed]

— WarTranslated (Dmitri) (@wartranslated.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 2:32 AM

That’s enough for tonight.

Your daily Patron!

There are no new Patron skeets or videos today. Here is some adjacent material.

🐿🇺🇦 Come down my darling, I’ve brought you some food.
Don’t worry! You’re safe! 🫂

[image or embed]

— Vitalis Viva (@vitalisviva.bsky.social) April 27, 2025 at 10:25 AM

Open thread!

War for Ukraine Day 1,158: The Conditionally Unconditional CeasefirePost + Comments (13)

Playing Musical Chairs This Week

by WaterGirl|  April 27, 20254:05 pm| 109 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

What are you guys up to on this fine weekend?

I am playing musical chairs in the house, in preparation for tearing out the carpeting in the sunroom and putting in hardwood floors.  Not that I am the one tearing out the carpeting or installing the hardwood floors – I am not handy like a lot of you, so I have to pay to have things done.

The new floors are Brazilian Walnut, and it turns out that the couch in that room looks terrible with the color of the wood, so I am trading the living room couch for the sunroom couch.  And of course the ottoman that was in the sunroom has to move with the couch, and the coffee table that goes with the (now) living room couch has to move with it.

But of course, the color and style of the bookcase doesn’t work well with the (soon) darker wood of the brazilian walnut so I had to move that to the living room and I’m moving something else into the sunroom to make room for the bookcase.

And then the matching piece that goes with the piece that’s moving to the sunroom has to also move with it.  And the (soon-to-be) living room couch is longer than the current one, so I have to move the existing bookcase somewhere else in the living room to make room for the bigger couch.

And of course as I’m figuring out what can go where, I have to address the pile of stuff that’s been on my dining room table since last fall.  I am now down to about 7 things that I have to find a place for.

The joys of living in a small house!  (1500 sq. ft.)

So that’s what I’ve been up to this week, in addition to a big project for one of my clients.

How about you guys?

Totally open thread.

Playing Musical Chairs This WeekPost + Comments (109)

Sunday Morning Coming Down

by Betty Cracker|  April 27, 202511:34 am| 178 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

We got up at stupid o’clock and went fishing at a nearby salt marsh. The weather has been super clear lately — too much so since we need rain. But the lack of humidity revealed the stars before dawn. Venus was especially bright.

On the way out of the swamp, a big Barred Owl swooped down on an unfortunate rodent right next to the dirt road. It was about 15 feet in front of the truck, and the owl looked balefully at us when we stopped, but it didn’t startle and drop the mouse or mole or whatever.

My camera was out of reach. I tried to lower the passenger seat window to get a shot of the owl with my phone, but the child lock was on for no earthly reason. It took Bill a few seconds to figure out how to unlock it, and by then, the owl had secured its breakfast and flown away.

So we resumed our trip. Here’s sunrise in the salt marsh:

Salmon-pink sky edged in blue at the top. There's a tree line in the distance, and it and the sky above are reflected in the water.

Here’s a view from a different spot after the sun came up:

Vegetation in various shades of green and brown in the foreground, with a line of trees in the distance.

Bill fished while I climbed around over logs and rocks, looking for birds and fiddler crabs and driftwood and what-not, as I’ve done in that particular salt marsh since I was a child. It was a nice way to start the day, even though Bill didn’t catch anything. (He said we should try with live shrimp next time rather than lures.)

***

Here’s some bad news for Trump, which is good news for people who prefer democracy over living in a shambolic right-wing kleptocracy:

Trump approval sinks as Americans criticize his major policies, poll finds

Another one:

CNN Poll: Trump’s approval at 100 days lower than any president in at least seven decades

Yet another:

Trump has lowest 100-day approval rating in 80 years: POLL

It sucks that we have to endure rule by a creepy authoritarian cult led by an evil, demented buffoon — all thanks to the malice, fecklessness and stupidity of 49.81% of voters. But we need people to wake up if we’re going to save our republic, and it looks like the ones who aren’t irredeemably lost are finally starting to say, “What the fucking fuck?” I’ll take that as a win.

***

Not sure what we’re going to do for the rest of the day. Maybe throw something on the grill? We’ll definitely be watching the baseball game this afternoon. (Go Rays!) What are y’all up to?

Open thread.

Sunday Morning Coming DownPost + Comments (178)

Overnight Open Thread: Quietly Exploring the Moon

by TaMara|  April 27, 202512:42 am| 46 Comments

This post is in: Open Threads

I covered this moon landing in an earlier post, and now Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost has been on the moon since March 2nd. Data is starting to come in. On their YouTube page (here), they have weekly updates.

Seems they are quietly doing science on the moon…

‘We learned so much that we didn’t know’: Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost moon lander mission was full of surprises

By Leonard David

“So there’s so much new discovery that we found and we can pass that forward to other CLPS missions.”

a grey orb dotted with craters seen behind a gold-foil-wrapped rectangular spacecraft hull

Firefly Aerospace’s Blue Ghost lunar lander captured stunning views of the moon after its second lunar orbit maneuver on Feb. 24, 2025. (Image credit: Firefly Aerospace)

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colorado — Lessons learned and on-the-spot surprises from the first fully successful commercial lunar lander mission bolsters the chances of long-term robotic and human operations on the moon.

The Firefly Aerospace Blue Ghost Mission 1 safely touched down on March 2 within the targeted Mare Crisium landing zone. Plopping down on its four landing legs, the spacecraft delivered ten science instruments and technology demonstration gear through the Commercial Lunar Payload Services (CLPS) initiative.

Blue Ghost completed more than 14 days of surface operations during 346 hours of daylight, stretching its lifetime for a little over 5 hours into the super-chilly lunar night.

***

Surprise finding

After landing, Blue Ghost immediately got to work.

Kim spotlighted two payloads, the LISTER drill to probe the moon’s subsurface and the Lunar PlanetVac that successfully collected, transferred, and sorted lunar regolith from the moon using pressurized nitrogen gas. It proved to be a low cost, low mass solution for future robotic sample collection.

LISTER was developed jointly by Texas Tech University and Honeybee Robotics, a Blue Origin company that also provided the Lunar PlanetVac.

The LISTER drill, plowing down an unprecedented three feet instead of a projected 10 feet, “did hit some really hard rock formations,” related Kim, “and that’s the whole discovery. We learned so much that we didn’t know.”

A surprising finding from Blue Ghost was the lunar temperature.

“Nobody has ever done noon operations on the lunar surface. We found out that it’s hotter than expected and modeled.” It actually starts sooner and it lasts longer, Kim said, observing that the temperature swings on the moon “were really, really crazy.”

***

Made in the shade solution

Blue Ghost mission controllers came up with a clever “beat the heat” idea during lunar operations.

When the lander was going through lunar noon and was over-heating, Earth operators wanted to assure radio operations were maintained.

Blue Ghost’s rectangular antenna on the lander’s top deck was gimbaled in such a way as to shade the area in which the radio was contained.

“We’re from Texas so we know about shade,” Kim said. Indeed, that “made in the shade” approach got the radio back into operational configuration.

Blue Ghost’s five-hour sojourn into the lunar night also provided some takeaway messages.

“NASA wanted us to turn on the payloads, so we did, and we actually got some payload data,” Kim said. “The LISTER was the last payload standing. That was pretty spectacular.”

These are just excerpts, the entire article is worth a read here.

 

 

Zander Kitty as a quilt block

I received a surprise gift from QuiltingFool. She took a photo of Zander and turned him into a quilt block and I couldn’t be more touched. I still miss that guy. He’s hanging next to Bixby right now until I decide how I want to display him.

My eyes have really been bothering me this late in the evening, so forgive any typos. I should really be off the screens this late…

This is an open thread

Overnight Open Thread: Quietly Exploring the MoonPost + Comments (46)

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 173
  • Page 174
  • Page 175
  • Page 176
  • Page 177
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 5296
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Tuesday Night Open Thread 4
Image by John Cole (11/13/25)

We did it!

Recent Comments

  • Lumpy on Open Thread: Chuck Schumer, Not the Hero We Wanted… (Nov 13, 2025 @ 6:54pm)
  • WaterGirl on A Bit of Levity (Nov 13, 2025 @ 6:53pm)
  • Lumpy on Open Thread: Chuck Schumer, Not the Hero We Wanted… (Nov 13, 2025 @ 6:51pm)
  • HopefullyNotCassandra on Open Thread: Chuck Schumer, Not the Hero We Wanted… (Nov 13, 2025 @ 6:50pm)
  • Gvg on Open Thread: Chuck Schumer, Not the Hero We Wanted… (Nov 13, 2025 @ 6:50pm)

Balloon Juice Posts

View by Topic
View by Author
View by Month & Year
View by Past Author

Featuring

Medium Cool
Artists in Our Midst
Authors in Our Midst
On Artificial Intelligence (7-part series)

🎈Keep Balloon Juice Ad Free

Become a Balloon Juice Patreon
Donate with Venmo, Zelle or PayPal

Calling All Jackals

Site Feedback
Nominate a Rotating Tag
Submit Photos to On the Road
Balloon Juice Anniversary (All Links)
Balloon Juice Anniversary (All Posts)
Fix Nyms with Apostrophes

Balloon Juice Mailing List Signup

Social Media

Balloon Juice
WaterGirl
TaMara
John Cole
DougJ (aka NYT Pitchbot)
Betty Cracker
Tom Levenson
David Anderson
Major Major Major Major
DougJ NYT Pitchbot
mistermix
Rose Judson (podcast)

We did it!

Site Footer

Come for the politics, stay for the snark.

  • Facebook
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Comment Policy
  • Our Authors
  • Blogroll
  • Our Artists
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2025 Dev Balloon Juice · All Rights Reserved · Powered by BizBudding Inc